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The Different Soil Types in Florida


Moose

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Surprisingly there are an array of soils found around the state as referenced by this figure.

post-1729-0-37516300-1433120544_thumb.gi

I’ve heard that Florida’s soils are pretty much all sand. Is that true? If so, how can sand be soil?

florida-soils.gif?w=240&h=215

Fig. 1. The soils of Florida

A: Many folks have the impression that Florida and its soils are nothing but sand. This is only partially true. Florida actually has a rich range of soils. Each color in Fig. 1 represents a unique soil type in the state.

True, many of Florida’s soils are dominated by sand. These sandy soils are represented by the blues, greens, and purples seen in the Florida peninsula in Fig. 1. More specifically, these soils are dominated by the mineral, quartz, which gives Florida its white sand beaches.

But not all of Florida soils are dominated by sand. The Everglades area in south Florida (Fig. 2), which covers approximately 734 square miles, is dominated by organic soils. These soils are depicted by the maroon color at the southern end of the Florida peninsula in Fig. 1.

And the orange color in the panhandle of Florida indicates soils that have a considerable amount of sand at the surface but also contain a significant amount of clay. Here you will find the red clays commonly associated with Georgia.

florida-everglades-kim-seng.jpg?w=240&h=

Fig. 2. The Florida Everglades are dominated by organic soils. Photo: Kim Seng, flickr.com

Now for the second part of the question: How can sand be a soil? Well, all soils are made up of mineral materials (sand, silt, and clay), organic material (decomposing plant parts), water, and air. In other words, while sand is an important component of soils, it is not the only component that makes a soil.

The white sand you see on Florida beaches is material that was laid down by the ocean over millennia and it’s the canvas upon which Florida soils have been painted. Another question could be: Where did all that sand come from? As the mountains of the southeastern U.S. weathered, rivers carried the minerals (sand, silt, and clay) to the ocean. Ocean currents then deposited these materials under water, where the ocean worked and reworked them.

Eventually, the water of the earth was tied up in snow and ice and sea levels lowered, allowing Florida to become dry land. That is why you can often find shark’s teeth in many Florida surface deposits.

–Answered by Nick Comerford, University of Florida

Coral Gables, FL 8 miles North of Fairchild USDA Zone 10B

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It turns out that Florida's peat bogs (Sphagnum moss) are poorly understood. Structurally, the Florida platform is similar to the Bahamas, but it's been coated in sand (and on occasion phosphate and clay) from the continent.

There are some freakish clay/non-acid soils (Alfisols), some rich in phosphate, around north Florida's springs. Sugar maple, swamp chestnut oak, Shumard oak, hop hornbeam, Carpinus, etc.

The famous steepheads on the east side of the Apalachicola River (where needle palm lives) are nearly unique, but there are very similar landforms on Mars, clinching the case that there was once free-flowing water.

Even on the Lake Wales Ridge (including Lake Wales and Sebring), red soils alternate with featureless ancient sand dunes (Psamments). The red typically had longleaf pine and short intervals between gentle fires, the dunes had scrub with intense fires at relatively long intervals.

Parts of Miami-Dade County and the Keys have essentially no soil at all, just coral or oolitic limestone.

There's a few areas in the world with bogs and sheet flow of water like the Everglades...a river in Poland, beaver ponds. When Europeans showed up in present-day Pennsylvania, the streams were series of beaver meadows with water flowing Everglades-style. Soon, the beavers were dead, their dams burst, and the creeks had eroded steep new banks.

Fla. climate center: 100-119 days>85 F
USDA 1990 hardiness zone 9B
Current USDA hardiness zone 10a
4 km inland from Indian River; 27º N (equivalent to Brisbane)

Central Orlando's urban heat island may be warmer than us

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Now this is interesting.....is there anyway to blow this map up bigger to see the details better. Looks like its pretty acurate. Thanks.

David Simms zone 9a on Highway 30a

200 steps from the Gulf in NW Florida

30 ft. elevation and sandy soil

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Now this is interesting.....is there anyway to blow this map up bigger to see the details better. Looks like its pretty acurate. Thanks.

David I tried but there was not enough pixels. I believe the orgiginal chart was never in digital form. I plugged the computer into the large screen TV to give my old eyes a better gander.

Coral Gables, FL 8 miles North of Fairchild USDA Zone 10B

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Here is an interesting website

http://websoilsurvey.nrcs.usda.gov/app/

The weight of lies will bring you down / And follow you to every town / Cause nothin happens here

That doesn't happen there / So when you run make sure you run / To something and not away from

Cause lies don't need an aero plane / To chase you anywhere

--Avett Bros

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